Cornutiu, Gavril and Let-Cornutiu, Oana (2016) Considerations on the Lifespan from Diagnosis to Death in Alzheimer’s Disease. British Journal of Medicine and Medical Research, 11 (11). pp. 1-7. ISSN 22310614
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Abstract
Background: Evolution of Alzheimer’s disease from the onset of dementia to death is estimated by different authors as lasting between a few months and 21 years.
Objective: To verify whether there is an explanation for this dispersion of evolution of cases, starting only from clinical information.
Methods: A number of 75 cases of patients dead between 01. Jan. 2011 and 31. Dec. 2012 were analyzed. Data on deaths was collected from the County’s Statistics Institute; other information was collected from patient charts.
Results: Gender, onset age, co-morbidities and treatment do not influence the dispersion of cases. Dispersion started at less than one month from diagnosis and ended 11.42 years after diagnosis. At the age of 65, a boom in incidence of dementia symptoms as a stage of the disease was recorded. Dispersion of cases was divided into 3 evolution groups: the majority between 0-3 years, followed by 3-6 years and 6-11.42 years, as a Gaussian curve.
Conclusions:
1. The age of 64-65 may be considered a high risk age and it should be monitored accordingly.
2. The question of how just was Kraepelin’s disjunction into pre-senile and senile dementias arises.
In terms of evolution, according to dispersion, there are versions of the same disease or different diseases in pathogenesis depth, but similar in symptomatology.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | Librbary Digital > Medical Science |
| Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@librbarydigit.com |
| Date Deposited: | 22 May 2023 06:21 |
| Last Modified: | 14 Aug 2025 03:33 |
| URI: | http://index.go2articles.com/id/eprint/682 |
